Palestinian Leader Abbas Threatens to Quit
U.S.-Backed Head of Fatah Party Expresses "Desire Not to Run" in Next Election, Plunging Peace Process Into Doubt
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Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas gives a speech in the West Bank city of Ramallah, Nov. 5, 2009. (AP Photo/Bernat Armangue)
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Secretary of State Hillary Clinton talks during a presser with Egyptian foreign minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit, not pictured, following her meeting with President Hosni Mubarak at the Presidential palace in Cairo, Egypt, Nov. 4, 2009. (AP Photo/Amr Nabil)
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From right to left : Bahraini Foreign Minister Sheik Khalid bin Ahmed Al Khalifa, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, Deputy Prime Minister of Kuwait Sheikh Mohammad Al-Salem Al-Sabah, and Foreign Minister of Saudi Arabia Prince Saud Al Faisal attend a meeting at the Palmeraie Golf Palace in Marrakech, Morocco, Nov. 2, 2009. (AP Photo/Abdeljalil Bounhar)
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Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, left, chats with her Moroccan counterpart Taib Fassi Fihri upon her arrival at Marrakech airport early on Nov. 1, 2009. (AP Photo/Abdelhak Senna, Pool)
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Interactive Mideast Conflict Events, key players and a history of the world's most unstable region.
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Photo Essay Pursuing Peace In Israel, secretary of state Hillary Clinton vows U.S. will "vigorously" promote peace efforts.
But it also could boost the prospects of a popular candidate who reportedly wants to run for the presidency from his Israeli prison cell.
Abbas blamed his decision on the stalemate in peace talks, but the wording of his televised speech late Thursday raised speculation that it was not final and could be a tactic for pushing Israel and the U.S. toward a larger compromise.
He said only that it was "desire not to run in the upcoming elections" which are set for January but could be delayed, extending his current term indefinitely.
Abbas took over after the death of Yasser Arafat in 2004, and Western leaders have come to see him as a symbol of moderation. Although criticized as indecisive and associated with the corruption-tainted old guard of his Fatah party, he has given free rein to his prime minister, Salam Fayyad, to reform the West Bank's economy and boost its police, which has resulted in a limited economic upturn.
But the stalemate with Israel overshadows all, and Fatah activists say the party is in a panic, fearing a fragmented slate of candidates that would hand victory to Hamas.
Late last month, Abbas told U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton that he would not run, but recanted after President Obama called him and expressed his commitment to Mideast peacemaking, Abbas' aides said. A senior Palestinian official told The Associated Press that Abbas informed other Fatah leaders of his latest decision several days ago but didn't tell Mr. Obama.
Insiders say he was disheartened by Washington's refusal to press Israel harder for a freeze on West Bank settlement construction, and that this week's visit by Clinton, when she appeared to side with Israel over the settlement issue, was the last straw.
Abbas has insisted that he won't resume negotiations until Israel stops all construction.
If he were to concede on that issue, Fatah could lose the election. If that happened, the international community would have no one to deal with but Hamas, which denies Israel's right to exist and rejects the two-state solution endorsed by Fatah.
The most attractive candidate to replace 74-year-old Abbas would likely be Marwan Barghouti, 49, who was jailed for life in 2002 for his involvement in fatal Palestinian attacks.
Activists say Barghouti, the top West Bank Fatah official until his arrest, is determined to run from prison. The charismatic Palestinian was once a favorite of Israeli peace activists but turned increasingly militant. His refusal to recognize the Israeli court's right to try him, and his defiant gestures and smiles for the cameras, heightened his popularity among Palestinians.
He ran for president from his cell in 2004 but withdrew under pressure from Fatah leaders. This time, associates say, he is determined to stay in the contest.
Barghouti's incarceration could work both for and against him. It might be difficult for him to campaign from a jail cell, but his nomination could force his release. Also, imprisonment has shielded him from blame for the absence of a peace accord with Israel, a shattered West Bank economy and Hamas in power in Gaza.
Yossi Sarid, an Israeli former lawmaker identified with the peace movement, said Israel and the U.S. humiliated Abbas, leading to his decision. "This means that we are probably entering a terrible period where the extremists will run the show," Sarid said.
In case Abbas steps down, Fatah insiders are promoting Nasser Al-Kidwa, 50, as a candidate. He has served as the Palestinian representative at the U.N., is not linked with the corruption that bedevils the party, and has the additional benefit of being Arafat's nephew.
Another potential candidate is Mohammed Dahlan, 48, a one-time Fatah strongman in Gaza. He was recently elected to the top Fatah policy-making body, but he is blamed by many for losing Gaza to Hamas, and is tainted by allegations of corruption.
Hamas spokesman Taher Nunu said he didn't believe Abbas really meant to step down. "His speech wasn't for the Palestinians alone," he said. "It was for the United States and the international community, so they will give him more support in the elections."
After Abbas' speech, Clinton praised his leadership in working toward the creation of a Palestinian state next to Israel. Speaking to reporters in Washington, she ignored a question about whether she would urge Abbas to stay on and saying only that she would go on working with him to advance peace.
© MMIX, The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
- I suppose that Abbas did what a number of CBS News bloggers would like to do: namely, kill American servicemen and Jewish civilians, and get away with it.
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- The problem here is RELIGION, for thousands of years people have been driking the cool-aid and creating cultural & racial divisions within our fellow humans.
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- The U.S. was not an honest broker under Bush, and it has now become clear that the U.S. won't be an honest broker under Obama and Clinton. Instead they want Israel to have his cake (settlements) and to eat the cake too (winning peace). Abbas is one smart guy in refusing to play this game.
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- Let the treacherous bastard quit. He has done nothing but sell out the Palestinians.
The two-state solution will not work since these zionists have stolen half of the West Bank with their settlements. It will be a one-state solution, and with the one state solution, "israel" automatically looses its jewish majority and BAM, "israel" is not a jewish state anymore.
I cant wait till that day happens. - Reply to this comment
- If Mohammad Abbas wishes to quit leadership that is his choice. Hamas should have its candidates for election as they were voted into leadership and not Al Fatah. No one else but the Palestinians should have the choice of their own leader. Palestine should be a sovereign state and not a colony.
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- Quit, who cares. America has to learn how to look after it's own country and people let alone the world. We have big problems in our own country as you can see by the recent incident. Also we have a bunch of cry baby politicians who leech off the American public and really make out like they are really doing something.
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- Dam, we'll all be so lost with out him... Anyways who is this guy again and what has he done to inprove the situation?
Resin - Reply to this comment
- Smart move,his quitting -he is in mission impossible & already has the bribe $$$ for being a US stooge.
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- I dont't know if you city folk have ever heard the saying { time to p-ss on the fire and call in the dogs. Well it appears the dogs are begining to p--s on the fire before told to do so. Everybody wants something for thier effort. This man wants something he has a ultierior motive. The dogs ? Well they just want to go home.
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- "Palestinian Leader Abbas Threatens to Quit"
Must be related to Palin, when things started going wrong in Alaska she just quit too. Quitters make great leaders. - Reply to this comment




